Bill Nye

From Free net encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)

Current revision

For the 19th century journalist, see Edgar Wilson Nye.

Image:Billnye spinner.jpg William S. Nye (born November 27, 1955), known as "Bill Nye the Science Guy", is an American television program host, scientist, and mechanical engineer.

Contents

Biography

Bill S. Nye was born in Washington, D.C.. He attended Sidwell Friends School, graduating in 1973. Later he attended Cornell University's Sibley School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, where he studied under Carl Sagan and graduated in 1977 with a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering. Nye began his career at Boeing where, among other things, he starred in training films and developed a hydraulic pressure resonance suppressor still used in the company's 747 airliner today.

Before starting into entertainment, Nye worked as a consultant and in the aeronautics industry. At one time while working on the A-12 stealth attack aircraft, Nye had level-three security clearance with the U.S. Department of Justice. Nye is also a member of the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal.

Nye has been a licensed mechanical engineer in Washington since 1983. Nye got his television start performing on a Seattle-area sketch comedy show called Almost Live!, and appeared regularly on the show for many seasons. He left the show to start producing Bill Nye the Science Guy in 1992. Nye was also the mute assistant of Dr. Emmett L. Brown in the live-action segments of Back to the Future: The Animated Series (19911993).

At an impromptu wedding, Nye married Blair Tindall (photo), his fiancée of five months, on Friday, February 3, 2006. Lacking rings, the pair exchanged watches, “as a symbol,” Nye explained, “of man’s reckoning with time.”¹ Tindall is the author of Mozart in the Jungle and is a former concert oboist. The two exchanged vows at Richard Saul Wurman’s The Entertainment Gathering 2006 conference where Nye spoke. They were married by the Rev. Rick Warren, pastor and author of The Purpose Driven Life. Cellist Yo-Yo Ma, accompanied by MIT Media Lab professor Michael Hawley on the piano, performed a wedding march.

The Science Guy

Main article: Bill Nye the Science Guy

Nye hosted the Emmy Award-winning educational television program Bill Nye the Science Guy from 1992 to 1998. Each episode, 100 in all, aimed to teach a specific topic in science to a preteen audience, yet garnered a wide adult audience as well. The show was and still is popular as a television show and as a school resource. He has written several books as The Science Guy. In addition to hosting the show, he was also a writer and producer for it.

Other achievements

Template:Cleanup-date

Scientific

Entertainment

  • Bill Nye has starred alongside Ellen DeGeneres, Alex Trebek, and the tourists of Walt Disney World in "Ellen's Energy Adventure", an attraction playing since 1996 in the Universe of Energy pavilion inside Epcot at Walt Disney World Resort. He also helps guests create their own roller coaster (that they get to ride in simulator form) in an attraction called "CyberSpace Mountain" at Walt Disney World's interactive arcade theme park Disneyquest.
  • Bill also held the boom mic during 4 episodes of Popular Mechanics for Kids.
  • He is currently working on a new public television science television series, called The Eyes of Nye, aimed at more mature audiences than his previous show. It often features episodes based on politically relevant themes such as genetically-modified foods, climate warming, and race.
  • Nye starred in the episode "Scorched" (2005) of the CBS TV drama NUMB3RS as a professor in the combustion lab of the same university where David Krumholtz's character works.[1]
  • In 2005, Bill Nye hosted 100 Greatest Discoveries, an award-winning series for Discovery's Science Channel produced by Thinkfilm, Inc. in Washington, DC.

Other

  • Bill Nye also hosts a column on [MSN Encarta] called [Ask Bill Nye].

References

¹ LA Weekly Bill Gets Hitched

External links